Catalan lawmakers set to elect new hard-line leader

Pro-independence candidate Quim Torra, handpicked as a candidate by deposed leader Carles Puigdemont, is expected to be elected as Catalan regional president later Monday. (AFP)
Updated 14 May 2018
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Catalan lawmakers set to elect new hard-line leader

  • The formation of a new regional government is required for Spain to lift the state of direct rule
  • The Spanish courts have declared secession illegal and vowed to block it

BARCELONA: The Catalan parliament is expected to elect fiercely pro-independence candidate Quim Torra to be its regional president later Monday as separatists seek to end the emergency direct rule imposed by Madrid last year and renew their secession bid.
Torra’s elevation became all but assured after the far-left radical pro-independence CUP party said it would abstain from an investiture vote in the regional parliament on Monday.
“The CUP will not block the formation of a new government,” the party said.
The absence of its votes will leave father of three Torra with the simple majority needed to be elected regional president.
Analysts warned the road ahead would be a rocky one, however, with politicians and voters split on the merits of trying to leave Spain.
The formation of a new regional government is required for Spain to lift the state of direct rule.
The Catalan regional assembly had failed to elect Torra in an initial vote requiring an absolute majority on Saturday.
In the second-round vote scheduled for Monday, only a simple majority will be required so Torra is expected to win the vote.
He was handpicked as a candidate by deposed leader Carles Puigdemont.
Puigdemont is in exile in Germany and faces jail on rebellion charges for last year’s secession bid if he returns to Spain.
In an interview Saturday with Italian daily La Stampa, Puigdemont said Torra, as his designated successor, “takes power in provisional conditions and he is aware of that. From October 27, he will be able to call new elections.”
Torra, 55, gave a combative speech during Saturday’s debate.
He told parliament he was “working tirelessly for the Catalan republic.”
He signaled that the secession crisis is far from over, even if Catalonia does finally get a government.
Separatist leaders declared Catalonia independent last October after an outlawed independence referendum.
That prompted Madrid to impose direct rule and led to months of political limbo.
Torra lambasted European institutions for their “unacceptable silence” over the Catalan crisis. He said he was ready to talk “without conditions” with the government of Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.
Rajoy’s government and the Spanish courts have declared secession illegal and vowed to block it.
Rajoy said that constitutional direct rule “could be used again if necessary,” if the next regional leadership did not respect the law.
Catalonia is Spain’s richest and most populous region, with 7.5 million people.
It has its own distinct language and cultural traditions.
Calls have increased in recent years for it to have more control over its finances, with some demanding outright independence.
Last year’s secession bid plunged Spain into its biggest political crisis in decades.
Separatist parties won regional elections in December. But every leadership candidate picked by the separatist camp since has fallen flat.
Torra faces divisions within the separatist camp, composed of the CUP, the leftwing ERC party and Puigdemont’s Together for Catalonia grouping, according to Antonio Barroso, deputy research director at Teneo Intelligence.
Barroso said the ERC wants a moderate approach to avoid a Madrid clampdown and to play a longer independence game.
“In contrast, Puigdemont’s strategy is to continue using every opportunity... to continue challenging the Spanish authorities and keep the secessionist momentum alive.”
For Oriol Bartomeus, political analyst at Barcelona Autonomous University, what is in sight is “a divided government — there could be fallout.”
Ines Arrimadas, leader of the centrist, unionist Ciudadanos party, told Torra on Saturday: “I don’t know if you will be president of the regional government, but you will never be the one of all Catalans.”


French-Israeli activists hit out at ‘complicity in genocide’ case

Rachel Touitou (L) and Nili Kupfer-Naouri during a press conference in Netanya on February 8, 2026. (AFP)
Updated 6 sec ago
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French-Israeli activists hit out at ‘complicity in genocide’ case

  • Israel’s retaliation flattened much of Gaza and left more than 71,800 people dead, according to the health ministry, whose figures are considered reliable by the United Nations

NETANUA, Israel: Two French-Israeli activists facing legal summons in France for “complicity in genocide” denounced on Sunday what they described as a political trial.
The summons were issued in July last year for lawyer Nili Kupfer-Naouri of the Israel is Forever group and Rachel Touitou of the Tsav 9 group over protests in 2024 and 2025 in which trucks carrying humanitarian aid for Gaza were blocked at checkpoints.
The summons call for the two to appear before an investigating magistrate but not for their detention.
Speaking at an event in Netanya in central Israel, Kupfer-Naouri asserted that “this is not an individual case, this is a state matter... this is a political trial.”
Touitou told AFP that she had “protested peacefully, my only ‘weapon’ was an Israeli flag,” adding she had been motivated by accusations of Hamas looting aid while hostages were “rotting” in militants’ hands.
“International law cannot be hijacked and instrumentalized for political ends,” she added.
Kupfer-Naouri, who has filed a slander complaint in France against organizations involved in the case, said: “You cannot be accused of complicity in genocide when no court, either French or international, has ruled that there is a genocide in Gaza.”
The Gaza war was sparked by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Israel’s retaliation flattened much of Gaza and left more than 71,800 people dead, according to the health ministry, whose figures are considered reliable by the United Nations.
A ceasefire has been in place since October 10, though both sides have repeatedly accused each other of violations.